Five Debris Disks Newly Revealed in Scattered Light from the HST NICMOS Archive
R\'emi Soummer, Marshall D. Perrin, Laurent Pueyo, \'Elodie Choquet,, Christine Chen, David A. Golimowski, J. Brendan Hagan, Tushar Mittal,, Margaret Moerchen, Mamadou N'Diaye, Abhijith Rajan, Schuyler Wolff, John, Debes, Dean C. Hines, Glenn Schneider

TL;DR
This study reanalyzed archival HST/NICMOS data to spatially resolve five debris disks in near-infrared scattered light, revealing new disk structures and increasing the known sample of such disks, with implications for studying planet formation.
Contribution
The paper introduces advanced image processing techniques to resolve five debris disks in scattered light for the first time, expanding the catalog of known disks and highlighting their potential for future planet formation studies.
Findings
Resolved five debris disks in near-infrared scattered light.
Disks exhibit diverse inclinations and structures, including rings and asymmetries.
Increased the number of debris disks imaged in scattered light by 21%.
Abstract
We have spatially resolved five debris disks (HD 30447, HD 35841, HD 141943, HD 191089, and HD 202917) for the first time in near-infrared scattered light by reanalyzing archival Hubble Space Telescope (HST)/NICMOS coronagraphic images obtained between 1999 and 2006. One of these disks (HD 202917) was previously resolved at visible wavelengths using HST/Advanced Camera for Surveys. To obtain these new disk images, we performed advanced point-spread function subtraction based on the Karhunen-Loeve Image Projection (KLIP) algorithm on recently reprocessed NICMOS data with improved detector artifact removal (Legacy Archive PSF Library And Circumstellar Environments Legacy program). Three of the disks (HD 30447, HD 35841, and HD 141943) appear edge-on, while the other two (HD 191089 and HD 202917) appear inclined. The inclined disks have been sculpted into rings; in particular, the disk…
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